I think treating your chickens and their coop will be enough. Good luck.
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Hi, welcome to BYC!This evening I soaked and cleaned my chickens feet and legs as they were rough with raised scales and areas of growths everywhere. Her feet softened and sloughed a considerable amount of dead skin. I then applied a thick layer of vaseline to her feet, toes and legs. After returning her to the coop I realized I was covered in crawling, biting mites!! Quickly took a long ,hot shower but I still feel like they are crawling all over me! How do I rid my coop and chickens of this pest?
I'm sorry, I missed what you are spraying with??I use it as a preventative in the sense that if my chickens have a few mites in them by spraying them every week or 2 the mites will not be able to establish themselves.
Oh, that's right.View attachment 1202650 The mite killer spray I use.
That is a really good idea. Unforntunately I don’t have any chickens at the momentI'd like to see some before and after pictures of all of the treatments suggested, including minehide). I have one right now that I'm about to start treatment on, so I will get som pictures of her before I start.
Could be that Sevin was taken off the market. I haven’t been in America since the end of August as I’m on my gap year. I’ll have my parents check TSC when they go to buy me chick supplies mid January.I'm not sure, but I thought Sevin was taken off the market or even outlawed for use in chickens kind of recently?![]()
The fear-mongering over off label use of pesticides is a pet peeve of mine. In the US, carbaryl (Sevin) and Frontline are not labeled for use in poultry. so neither one is supposed to be used. The fear mongers will spout BS like "lifetime withdrawal", but think about it, how true is that? Do these pesticides leave a residue in eggs for a "lifetime". If so, what about the birds that were treated with Sevin before the label change of Sevin? Or eggs from Canadian birds where carbaryl is still approved?I'm not sure, but I thought Sevin was taken off the market or even outlawed for use in chickens kind of recently?
I have used the Frontline mentioned by another poster on my dogs when my mom used to bring her fleas to my house. It was very effective and didn't cause reactions as some others did. However as far as I know it is also NOT approved for use in chickens and I would think would require a considerable withdrawal time for eggs since it's effective for at least 30 days.![]()